What police found at pilotâs home

Written By komlim puldel on Jumat, 27 Maret 2015 | 20.01

'Took the plane down' ... co-pilot Andreas Lubitz, 28, lived with his parents and had begun flying as a teenager. Picture: Twitter/FacebookSource: Supplied

A French prosecutor says the Germanwings plane most probably crashed by voluntary descension.

GERMAN prosecutors revealed the "significant discovery" made at Germanwing co-pilot Andreas Lubitz's home was a sick note covering the day of the crash.

Prosecutors found "torn-up and current sick leave notices" suggesting he was ill and receiving medical treatment, backing up suspicions he hid his illness from his employer and colleagues.

While investigators did not specify what illness Lubitz had, German media reports he needed ongoing assessments for severe depression, BBC reports.

Duesseldorf prosecutors said in a statement that "interviews on this subject and the evaluation of medical records will take several more days", and that the outcome would be made public "once reliable evidence is available".

Authorities did not find a "suicide note or a confession", or any evidence that the co-pilot's actions may have been motivated by "a political or religious background".

Officers had on Thursday combed through a flat Andreas Lubitz kept in Duesseldorf as well as the house where he lived with his parents in the small western town of Montabaur.

The news comes following revelations the captain, Patrick Sonderheimer, used an axe to break down the cockpit's armoured door when he was locked out on the day of the crash.

This could not be immediately confirmed, but a spokesman for Germanwings confirmed to AFP that an axe was on board the aircraft. Such a tool is "part of the safety equipment of an A320," the spokesman told German daily Bild.

Lubitz reportedly suffered a major breakdown following a recent relationship breakdown.

According to The Telegraph in the UK, Lubitz was engaged to be married next year, but had recently broken up with his fiancee. It is understood that the 28-year-old was struggling to cope after the relationship failed.

CNN also reported transponder data revealed the autopilot on the doomed flight was reprogrammed by someone in the cockpit to change the plane's altitude from 38,000 feet to 100 feet, according to Flightradar24.

Marseilles prosecutor Brice Robin said the 28-year-old German crashed the plane "intentionally" and locked the captain out of the cockpit on Tuesday.

Now the mother of Lubitz's former classmate says he was forced to postpone pilot training around 2009 and suffered from "burnout or depression".

Significant find ... A suicide note was not thought to be the discovery. Picture: Sascha Steinbach/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

"I can only image the whole thing was a knee-jerk reaction. It can't have been planned, although it was actually like a killing spree," she told The Mirror.

In a press conference overnight, Lufthansa CEO Carsten Spohr confirmed that Lubitz had taken several months off work without disclosing why, but said he was considered mentally and physically fit to fly.

He said Lubitz had passed all psychological tests required to begin training and underwent regular physical examinations.

A Spiegel reporter, Matthias Gebauer, tweeted that friend of Lubitz said he had "burnout or depression" in 2009 and took a break from his pilot training.

Mr Spohr said that it appears the captain punched in the emergency number into the cockpit door to gain entry, but the co-pilot deployed the five-minute override.

Mr Robin said there is no indication this was an act of terrorism, but stopped short of declaring it suicide, saying only it was a "legitimate" question to ask.

On the question of suicide, Mr Spohr said: "We can only speculate what might have been the motivation of the co-pilot. In a company that prides itself on its safety record, this is a shock. We select cockpit personnel carefully."

Mr Robin refused to give details on the pilot's religion or ethnic background, saying: "I don't think it's necessarily what we should be looking for."

Lubitz lived with his parents in Montabaur and also kept an apartment in Dusseldorf, a Germanwings hub, according to Montabaur mayor Gabriele Wieland.

Neighbour Johannes Rossmann said Lubitz appeared to be in good health and was a regular jogger. He described the pilot as calm and low-key.

"I do not believe he killed himself and claimed other people's lives," the 22-year-old Rossmann said. "I can't believe it until it is 100 per cent confirmed."

Lubitz was also identified by a flight club at which he was a member, according to the Wall Street Journal.

"Andreas became a member of the club as a youth to fulfil his dream of flying," the Luftsportclub Westerwald said in a death notice on its website. "He began as a gliding student and made it to become a pilots on an Airbus 320."

Lived at home ... police hold media away from the house where Andreas Lubitz lived in Montabaur, Germany. Picture: AP Photo/Michael ProbstSource: AP

"He fulfilled his dream, the dream he now paid for so dearly with his life," the club said.

"He was happy he had the job with Germanwings and he was doing well," glider club member Peter Ruecker told the Independent. "He gave off a good feeling."

Ruecker said that he remembers Lubitz as "rather quiet but friendly" when he first showed up at the club as a 14 or 15-year-old.

Club chairman Klaus Radke said he rejected French prosecutors' conclusion that Lubitz put the Germanwings flight intentionally into a descent when the pilot had left the cockpit.

"I don't see how anyone can draw such conclusions before the investigation is completed," he said.

Ruecker said Lubitz also trained in Phoenix, Arizona, and had a girlfriend but did not have many more details about his life. A recently deleted Facebook page bearing Lubitz's name showed him as a smiling man posing in front of the Golden Gate Bridge in California.

Childhood dream ... aviation club member Peter Ruecker stands beside a glider that was flown by Andreas Lubitz in the hangar of the club in Montabaur, Germany. Picture: AP Photo/Michael ProbstSource: AP

Lubitz joined Germanwings in September 2013 and had about 630 flight hours. He joined Germanwings straight from the Lufthansa Flight Training School in Bremen, the London Telegraph reports.

Lubitz first worked as a flight attendant, according to Thomas Winkelmann, the Greenwings managing director, who said there was nothing unusual in the results of Lubitz's training.

A 2013 article in the Aviation Business Gazette reported the US Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) inclusion of Lubitz in the prestigious FAA Airmen Certification Database, for having "met or exceeded the high educational, licensing and medical standards established by the FAA".

"FAA pilot certification can be the difference between a safe flight and one that ends in tragedy," the journal says.

Sympathy extended to family ... a nameplate at the home of Andreas Lubitz in Montabaur, Germany, where he lived with his parents. Picture: AP Photo/Michael ProbstSource: AP

Mr Robin outlined Lubitz's actions for the press in a chilling account of the plane's last 20 minutes.

"For the first 20 minutes of the flight, the pilots spoke in a normal way, you could say cheerful and courteous," Mr Robin said. "We heard the flight commander prepare the briefing for landing at Dusseldorf and the response of the co-pilot seemed laconic. Then we heard the commander ask the co-pilot to take the controls.

The captain has been identified as Patrick Sonderheimer. According to Bild and Europe1, Sonderheimer was married and the father of two children. He had more than 6000 flight hours, mostly on Airbus jets.

Mr Robin said the co-pilot's responses, initially courteous, became "curt" when the captain began the mid-flight briefing on the planned landing of the Germanwings flight which crashed in France, killing 150 people.

Mr Robin told a press conference the actions that took the plane down occurred during the last eight minutes of the flight, the Guardian reports.

While the co-pilot was alone at the controls, he initiated the descent of the plane, selecting the altitude in such a way that could only have occurred deliberately.

Devastation ... the crash site of the Germanwings Airbus in the French Alps, near Seyne, France. Picture: F Balsamo/Gendarmerie nationals/Ministere de l'Interieur via Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

"Forty-eight hours after the crash … the interpretation for us is that the co-pilot deliberately refused to open the door of the cockpit to the flight commander, and pushed the button causing a loss of altitude."

"We heard several calls from the flight commander asking for access to the cockpit," Mr Robin said. "There was a visual and audio interphone and he identified himself. There was no response from the co-pilot.

"We heard at the same time the sound of a seat being pushed back and the sound of a door closing."

Mr Robin said Lubitz could be heard breathing right up until the point of impact, suggesting he had not lost consciousness. However, he failed to respond to increasingly desperate calls from the commander trying to break down the cockpit door, or to air traffic controllers.

AUSTRALIA REVIEWS COCKPIT SAFETY PROCEDURES

Australian aviation authorities will review cockpit security procedures in the wake of the horrific Germanwings' crash.

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Infrastructure and Regional Development Warren Truss said the review would consider whether any changes were needed to regulations that allowed pilots to be left alone in the cockpit for brief periods.

Already several overseas carriers have changed their policy, to ensure no-one is ever left alone in the flight deck.

Since the September 11 attacks, US carriers have been required to have a flight attendant take the pilot or co-pilot's place when they leave the cockpit for a toilet break, or other reason.

"Careful consideration needs to be made following thorough investigation to ensure that altering current procedures does not open other potential vulnerabilities," Mr Truss said.